How To Write A Letter You May Never Send

Writing has a powerful effect on our emotional state. The following exercise is designed to help you fully express feelings that may have lain dormant for a long time, or may be too intense and jumbled for you to process effectively. You'll find it helpful in expressing what you feel, especially if you're having difficulty letting go, forgiving, grieving for or being appropriately angry at someone.

This letter is not designed to be mailed to anyone. After you write it, you may decide to write another appropriately adjusted for the other person to read. The point of this is to let your feelings out, uncensored and unedited. Begin by expressing your anger, resentment and blame, and allow yourself to move through the other levels until you get down to the love.

You may find your feelings begin pouring out as you write. If so, just go with what you feel. If you get stuck or confused, using the following suggested lead-in phrases may help you.

Now put the letter away for a couple of days, then re-read it and decide if you want to share part of it with the other person. If you're writing to someone who has passed on, you may want to burn the letter to symbolically "send" it.